Teaching Children Tolerance Marxist-Style

Founded in 1991 as a project of the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), Teaching Tolerance (TT) works to “foster school environments that are inclusive and nurturing,” and to help teachers “prepare a new generation to live in a diverse world.” Toward these ends, TT produces a plethora of multimedia teaching kits, online curricula, and professional-development resources for classroom instructors, as well as a biannual publication, Teaching Tolerance magazine, which reaches more than 450,000 educators nationwide. All of these materials are made available to educators at no cost.

The individual in charge of Teaching Tolerance is William Ayers, the former Weather Underground terrorist and university professor. In a glowing profile that appeared in Teaching Tolerance magazine, SPLC research fellow Gabrielle Lyon depicted Ayers as an “education reformer,” a “civil rights organizer,” a champion of “social justice,” and a “teacher and author” with “a rich vision of teaching that interweaves passion, responsibility and self-reflection.”

Bearing the unmistakable imprint of Ayers and SPLC founder Morris Dees, TT’s lesson plans contain reading materials and suggested classroom activities designed to steer K-12 students toward the conclusion that America is, and always has been, an inequitable, racist and sexist society. For example:

* A series of lessons titled “Issues of Poverty” emphasize that “poverty is systemic, rooted in [capitalist] economics, politics and discrimination.”

* “Sexism: From Identification to Activism” is designed to make students aware of the many “ways in which sexism manifests in personal and institutional beliefs, behaviors, use of language, and policies.”

* “Visualizing School Equity” teaches that “unequal funding systems have concentrated students of color into underfunded, under-equipped institutions that some critics call ‘apartheid schools.’”

* “Test Yourself for Hidden Bias” urges students to “examine” their own “unconscious, or automatic, biases” as “an important step in understanding the roots of stereotypes and prejudice in our society.”

* “Six Lessons from Jena” emphasizes the prevalence of white racism in American culture, and of discrimination in the juvenile-justice system.

* “Recognizing the Undocumented” features “activities that will make students aware of the roles that undocumented immigrants play in the harvest and processing of food and other necessary products … and appreciate the importance of human rights.”

* “The Immigration Debate” requires students to read a commentary by SPLC legal director Mary Bauer, encouraging them “to take a hard look at the harm and devastation done to people of Alabama because of the state’s anti-immigrant legislation.”

* “Economic Injustice Affects Us All” introduces students to the strikes and boycotts that the socialist labor activists Cesar Chavez and Dolores Huerta led against grape growers in California. After being thoroughly indoctrinated in the “injustice” of “income disparity,” students are directed to strike a blow for “economic justice” by creating various art projects that visually illustrate pay differences between executives and low-level employees.

* “Thanksgiving Mourning” teaches that Native Americans, because of “the racism and oppression” they have had to endure ever since Europeans arrived in the New World, often view Thanksgiving only as “a reminder of the genocide of millions of their people, the theft of their lands, and the relentless assault on their culture.”